Retro Gaming & Preservation — July 13, 2026
Nintendo Switch Online adds a long-awaited Game Boy classic this week, while Germany's largest video game preservation institution announces closure due to lack of public funding. Retro handhelds are emerging as the primary vehicle for preserving gaming history as industry institutions face mounting challenges.
Retro Gaming & Preservation — July 13, 2026
Rereleases & Remasters
Game Boy nostalgia reaches new heights this week as a long-awaited classic arrives on Nintendo Switch Online.

Steam continues its summer push for classic gaming with remasters gaining traction. Notable titles include Gothic 1 Remake, Beyond Good & Evil - 20th Anniversary Edition, and The Thing: Remastered, offering both nostalgic revisits and modernized gameplay experiences for players seeking retro action and adventure on PC.
Preservation
Major Crisis in European Game Preservation
Germany's largest video game preservation effort is shutting down. The Internationale Computerspielesammlung (ICS), which housed one of Europe's most comprehensive digital game archives, announced closure due to "lack of necessary public support." The decision leaves thousands of preserved titles in peril and raises urgent questions about long-term archival responsibilities.

The Shift to Handhelds
As institutional preservation falters, retro handhelds are becoming the de facto standard for keeping classic games accessible. A growing movement within the preservation community recognizes that standalone devices—not corporate platforms or institutional archives—may be gaming history's most reliable safeguard. According to preservation advocates, the industry's trade organizations have refused to offer meaningful legal alternatives, forcing enthusiasts to rely on community-driven hardware solutions.

Classic Spotlight
Super Mario Bros. Special Gets Spotlight
This week's retro recap highlights Super Mario Bros. Special, a fascinating chapter in Nintendo's early catalog that remains a compelling study in how regional variations shaped gaming history. The game exemplifies why preservation matters—without dedicated archival work, such regional releases risk permanent obscurity.

A Week of Transition: The retro gaming landscape is clearly at an inflection point. Corporations expand digital access through subscription services, yet preservation institutions crumble. Meanwhile, the community—armed with handhelds and emulators—quietly becomes gaming's true archivists.
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